Nicholas Ray | On Dangerous Ground | Johnny Guitar | Born to Be Bad | In a Lonely Place
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On Dangerous Ground (1951) seems like two movies. The first section takes place in the city, and features a tough urban atmosphere familiar to us in film noir. The second section shares the same protagonist, the tough cop played by Robert Ryan, but otherwise introduces completely new characters and plot. This second mystery case takes place in the countryside, in a frozen mountainous area referred to as "upstate".
Ray's Johnny Guitar (1954) shows plot and character similarities with the second part of the earlier On Dangerous Ground (1951). Both films have a character who is driving the authorities forward to arrest someone for a crime: vengeance for a murdered relative. This character is fanatic, relentless and unsympathetic in both films. Both have a young criminal, who is just a teenage boy and who barely knows what he is doing. Both criminals are protected by a sympathetic woman, whose house is a central location in the film, and who has a romance with the hero. Although she is protecting criminals out an emotional attachment, she is honest herself in both films. There is also a mild mannered, easily influenced sheriff who tends to fade into the background of both movies. The hero in both films is an outsider, a stranger to the community. All of the others have known each other and lived in the same town, but he is a visiting newcomer. He is far more neutral and dispassionate than the others, viewing events calmly and with skepticism. He is also pretty macho: a gunslinger in Johnny Guitar, an obsessed cop in On Dangerous Ground. Both men are trying to recover from emotional problems brought on by excessive involvement with a violent job. Both heroes are played by tall actors who tower over the other characters in the film. These five characters are virtually the whole cast of the last hour of Ground. But in Johnny Guitar, they are expanded to a host of others who have no parallel in the earlier film. These include The Dancing Kid, the Borgnine character, and the employees as Vienna's place, plus Mercedes' brother. Admittedly, except for the Dancing Kid, these are all supporting types.
The young criminals in these films will be echoed in such later Ray films as Run for Cover and Rebel Without a Cause. The scenes at the end of On Dangerous Ground, where the older hero and the young criminal fight it out over dramatic terrain and lonely buildings, find an echo in the final confrontation of Run for Cover.
The emotional problems of the hero at the start of Ground fall into a different kind of Ray movie. He is allied to a whole series of troubled Ray characters. The screenplay of this film is by A.I. Bezzerides, who later did Kiss Me Deadly (1955), directed by Robert Aldrich. Both films feature anti-heroes. Both films serve as critical looks at their protagonists, revealing their faults and character flaws. However, Robert Ryan's weary cop here is infinitely more decent than the sleazy private eye of the later film. He is honest, and tries to do his best, whereas Mike Hammer is selfish and corrupt.
The two parts of the film have different visual styles. But both sections feature extensive panning. The second part features brilliant landscape photography, as Ray's camera pans over snows covered mountain roads and trails. These sections are unusual in that they do not feature wilderness areas. Instead, these scenes always have human habitations in them: roads, farmhouses, paths, and other human constructions. They can be described as rural, or as tourist areas. the sort of remote but inhabited location one might go to on vacation. Such locales rarely pop up in movies. Westerns, which feature vast landscapes, tend to have wilderness areas without modern buildings. And contemporary films rarely go to such poverty stricken tourist spots, preferring resort and wilderness areas with more glamour.
Color in Johnny Guitar is especially associated with the men. Turkey is in bright yellow, the Dancing Kid in green, while the hero is in pink. His pink is a form of masquerade, or deliberate personality change. He used to be an almost psychotic gunslinger; now he is trying to be an anti-macho musician and entertainer. So he has dressed himself in pink to project a non-threatening image. This is the least macho color he could find. It is similar to the way he conspicuously does not carry a gun, although they are hidden in his saddlebags. These changes might be on the surface only. His overly friendly, child like manners are also part of this self willed transformation.
By contrast, the women in the film are nearly colorless. Both wear flashes of green in the opening scenes, suggestive of the way they are both setting their caps for the Dancing Kid. But mainly they are in dark, neutral clothes. Through most of the film, they are either in black or white. There is a role reversal here. In many films, both Westerns and musicals, the men are in black and white, and the women are dressed in bright colors. In Johnny Guitar, it is exactly the reverse. This color scheme suggests it is the women who are the active agents in the film, and that the men are the sex objects they pursue. This is in fact the role the two genders play in the plot. The finale has heroine Joan Crawford in white squaring off against villainess Mercedes McCambridge in black. These are exactly the colors worn by countless male cowboy good guys and bad guys throughout film history.
Throughout the film, the hero Johnny Guitar is associated with manual dexterity and control. He enters the bar confrontation in the beginning after he prevents a rolling shot glass from falling off the edge: a memorable figure of style. He is an expert guitarist, as his name implies. Later, we see what a remarkable shot he is.
Born to Be Bad (1950) shares subject matter with Johnny Guitar. Both films are about two women, one good and one bad, who both vie for the same man. The good woman in both films is a career woman, good at business. Not all fifties films were so sympathetic to the concept of working women. By contrast, the evil woman here has no interest in work, explicitly rejecting career opportunities thrown her way. The bad woman in both films is absolutely relentless about achieving her goals - Ray's villains are horribly persistent. As in Johnny Guitar, the men here are mainly sex objects, pursued for either their looks or their money. However, the men have artistic talents in both films, being painters and writers here, just as they are musicians and dancers in Johnny Guitar.
Born to Be Bad has several weaknesses in plausibility. It is hard to believe that everyone would be so overwhelmingly attracted to the scheming villainess here, after seeing what a bad person she is. Also, the good characters in the film seem to have no weapons or defenses. Both of these things allow our evil star to run roughshod over everybody. Secondly, I do not enjoy villains; I am mainly interested in heroes and good characters. The virtual disappearance of the good woman in the second half of the film causes it to be less interesting to me.
Born to Be Bad is the subject of one of The Carol Burnett Show's best parodies, "Raised to be Rotten".
The good woman's apartment at the beginning of the movie is the film's most interesting set. Ray gets tremendous mileage out of his creative camera treatment of this set. It has many open, interconnecting rooms and a giant hallway. Ray is always offering interesting perspectives from one room to another. No one ever seems to actually be in a fixed place here, such as a room. They always seem to be in progress from one room to another. In contrast, the entrance of the villainess shows her absolutely motionless, suddenly discovered seated in a room. Throughout the film, we often see her posing for paintings or photographs, similarly seated and motionless. This lack of motion is treated by Ray as an evil quality, a lack of the vital energy and purposeful activity shown by the good characters.
Ray's rooms always seem to be strictly rectangular. He has little of Fritz Lang's interest in circles or polygons. Even when the characters are outside at Zachary Scott's mansion, they are on a rectangular porch, or a similarly rectilinear staircase.
Everyone always seems to be in some box. The box like effect is heightened by the way we see from one room into another. We see a character in another room, and the room looks like a giant box containing the actor. This is also true of the shots into the kitchen from the main gambling hall in Johnny Guitar, a similarly multi-roomed set. One also recalls the shots in On Dangerous Ground showing the performers inside their cars, shot from outside the automobiles. These too produce a box like effect.
Ray's staircases tend to be enclosed. Not for him some grand sweeping staircase off in free space. Instead, his staircases tend to be in some box like container. The good woman's apartment staircase is entirely contained in a rectilinear stairwell here: a box. The outdoor staircase at Zachary Scott's has a prominent wall along one side. (One also recalls the staircase in the gambling hall in Johnny Guitar, and the way it tightly hugs a separate wall at one end of the set.) Any performer standing on the staircase has an effect of being contained in a box.
Both staircases are often shot frontally, emphasizing the walls on each side. Ray does not like the baroque staircase angles often found in film noir. Instead he shoots with mathematical precision straight along the staircase, emphasizing its geometric, rectilinear nature. This too is a form of stylization. The avoidance of off angles gives a striking geometric quality to these shots. There is almost a ritualistic effect, highlighting the staircase almost as an object of sacred qualities.
In a Lonely Place (1950) is far from my favorite Ray film. I can't stand the lead character, played by Humphrey Bogart. He is a compulsively violent man who is always physically attacking everyone around him. In my judgement, this man is a menace and needs serious help. I also dislike the film's 1950's conformist ideas: anyone who is "different" from other people is probably a dangerous freak. The film really piles this on. No wonder so many people were eager to escape from 1950's conformity. The film has attitudes that are exactly bad. It is always justifying Bogart's violence, suggesting it is manly, and having it criticized by unpleasant people, such as the nasty cops. But his non-conformism is treated as horrible, and is the target of nice people, such as the cop's wife. This is the exact reverse of my own take: his violence is very harmful, but his non-conformism should be accepted.
The violent protagonist here recalls Ray's other leading men. But most of these men are handling their problems much better than the Bogart character here. The cop in On Dangerous Ground is a "normal" man being driven to violence and desperation by his horrible job. He realizes he needs a drastic change of pace to break this cycle; he finds it with Ida Lupino and the countryside. Similarly, Johnny Guitar is a formerly violent man who has succeeded in burying his past gunslinger personality under a whole new persona and character. Both men represent a hope for change here. The relentless persecution the hero gets from the cops here recalls the similar persecution Joan Crawford suffers in Johnny Guitar.
In a Lonely Place shows many of the same staging ideas as Born to Be Bad. Both films mainly take place in the characters' homes, or in locations such as restaurants or galleries in which people carry on their personal lives. These homes are full of staircases, and complex rectilinear paths leading through several levels and around corners. The characters are always moving up and down these paths and staircases, and seeing each from a distance along these routes. In both films, the creative artists work at home. This contributes to the nearly pure focus on people's personal lives - we rarely get to an office or business environment; everything is purely domestic.
Once again, the people in this Ray film are mainly creative artists, working in this time in film. This art form is largely verbal and visual, like the painters and writers of Born to Be Bad; there are no musicians or dancers in the movie, as there will be later in Johnny Guitar. Everyone is fairly affluent and successful with their work - these are not people starving in a garret. Even the police here are obsessed with photography. The police chief's wall is full of crime pictures, arranged in a regular rectilinear grid in true Ray style. The taking and displaying of photographs seems to be the police's main detective activity. Both the photography and Bogart's screenwriting are woven into the plot in complex ways. Events in the screen play can mimic events in the real lives of the characters, and vice versa. Also, the progress of the script is an important element in the plot. Pirandellian moments involve the characters talking about film technique, while the scene on screen illustrates it and acts it out. I do not recall seeing much of anything like this in other films. Jean-Luc Godard would sometimes introduce something analogous using his avant-garde approaches. Similarly, Mel Ferrer's portrait of Joan Fontaine plays a similarly complex role in Born to Be Bad.